The Ministry of Labour have drafted guidelines for the return of games, which include the wearing of masks which must be changed every 15 minutes.
GERMANY’S MINISTRY OF labour wants footballers to wear masks as protection against the coronavirus if Angela Merkel’s government gives the green light for the Bundesliga to return next month.
The German Football League (DFL) confirmed Thursday that they are ready for the Bundesliga to resume from 9 May, albeit without fans in stadiums and with strict player hygiene measures in place.
The final decision will be made by German Chancellor Merkel and state leaders, who are due to meet in Berlin on Thursday.
Germany has been less affected by the pandemic, but currently has 5,321 deaths due to the virus.
According to magazine Spiegel, the Federal Ministry for Labour has drafted safety guidelines which include a recommendation players wear a mask which would “not slip in sprints, headers, and challenges”.
“Should the masks slip, the game must immediately be stopped”, according to the draft, and because the masks would get wet fast due to exertion, they should be “replaced every 15 minutes at the latest”.
Germany’s team doctor Tim Meyer, part of the task force looking into how the German league can return, is sceptical.
“There have also been suggestions such as players should keep their distance in the free-kick wall,” Meyer told the German press agency DPA.
“But then the spectators would no longer perceive football as authentic.
“If players played with masks, I don’t think that would be accepted.”
Another suggestion in the ministry guidelines is that each team be quarantined in a hotel for the duration of the season amid hopes it can be completed in Germany by 30 June.
Players have already given a mixed response to the idea of being isolated for the nine remaining games of the season.
“I personally would find it extremely difficult to spend the next few weeks in a hotel and not be able to see my family,” Eintracht Frankfurt defender Danny da Costa told reporters.
However, Bayern Munich forward Thomas Mueller said being placed in quarantine may be the only way to get the season finished.
“It is quite clear that football would submit to almost all the rules necessary to play,” Mueller told magazine Sport Bild.
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